The absence of past costs related to the massive Takata air-bag inflator recall, which has slammed automakers around the world, also helped results, said Koji Kobayashi, Toyota's executive vice president and chief financial officer.

Toyota released results before the Tokyo markets closed, which was surprising. Many big Japanese companies wait until after trading ends to announce earnings — a practice that has been standard for decades.

Kobayashi, tapped by President and Chief Executive Akio Toyoda to help guide Japan's top automaker, said the company hopes to grow leaner, staying true to its practice of valuing grassroots input from its workers — a trademark Toyota work style that has inspired manufacturers around the world.

Much waste still could be eliminated, he said, pointing to the custom of "nemawashi," the traditional Japanese effort to form a consensus before making a decision. The company also creates a lot of internal reference materials that no one really looks at, he said.

"All workers must think like a Toyota person," he told reporters.

Toyota will pursue growth with a strategy of seeing itself as a "mobility company," not just an automaker, spending aggressively on research, according to the company.

It is banking on artificial intelligence and networking technology, as in connected and self-driving vehicles, to woo consumers.

All top automakers and many technology companies are working on similar products and services.

Ecological vehicles are another area where competition is heating up. Toyota leads the world in selling gas-electric hybrid vehicles, but has lagged in electric vehicles. It has been working hard to catch up in recent years.

Toyoda called his new management team "the seven samurai," after the Akira Kurosawa film classic. He said he hopes to turn the major changes happening in the auto industry into a big opportunity for the company.

Being a "mobility company" means more than pushing ahead with more of the same, but pursuing "a future that we forge ourselves," he added.

Just like his grandfather Kiichiro Toyoda turned a loom company into an automaker, he must also take up new challenges, Akio Toyoda said.

"We will do more than just survive. We will build toward the future," he said.

In the fiscal year through March, Toyota sold 10.44 million vehicles around the world, up from 10.25 million vehicles the previous fiscal year.

It expects to sell 10.5 million vehicles for the year through March 2019, with sales growing in regions other than its main U.S., Japanese and European markets, such as South America and Africa.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at https://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Her work can be found at https://www.apnews.com/search/yuri%20kageyama